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Thermodynamic Conditions Favorable to Superlative Thunderstorm Updraft, Mixed Phase Microphysics and Lightning Flash RateSatellite observations of lightning flash rate have been merged with proximal surface station thermodynamic observations toward improving the understanding of the response of the updraft and lightning activity in the tropical atmosphere to temperature. The tropical results have led in turn to an examination of thermodynamic climatology over the continental United States in summertime and its comparison with exceptional electrical conditions documented in earlier studies. The tropical and mid-latitude results taken together support an important role for cloud base height in regulating the transfer of Convective Available Potential Energy (CAPE) to updraft kinetic energy in thunderstorms. In the tropics, cloud base height is dominated by the dry bulb temperature over the wet bulb temperature as the lightning-regulating temperature in regions characterized by moist convection. In the extratropics, an elevated cloud base height may enable larger cloud water concentrations in the mixed phase region, a favorable condition for the positive charging of large ice particles that may result in thunderclouds with a reversed polarity of the main cloud dipole. The combined requirements of instability and cloud base height serve to confine the region of superlative electrification to the vicinity of the ridge in moist entropy in the western Great Plains.
Document ID
20050167057
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Williams, E.
(Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. Cambridge, MA, United States)
Mushtak, V.
(Massachusetts Inst. of Tech. Cambridge, MA, United States)
Rosenfeld, D.
(Hebrew Univ. Jerusalem, Israel)
Goodman, S.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Boccippio, D.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 23, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 2004
Publication Information
Publication: Atmospheric Research Special Issue
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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